PROTECTION THE OLDEST CHURCH IN PARIS BY AMERICANS
PROTECTION THE OLDEST CHURCH IN PARIS BY AMERICANS
LEARN MORE ABOUT PROTECTION THE OLDEST CHURCH IN PARIS BY AMERICANS AND EXPLORE HOW A GROUP OF AMERICANS IS WORKING TO SAVE THIS CHURH
PROTECTION THE OLDEST CHURCH IN PARIS BY AMERICANS
The church that stands in the center of Saint-Germain-des-Prés’s sixth arrondissement was built in 543 CE, during King Childebert I’s reign. It is said to be the oldest in all of Paris. Several of the city’s most cherished cafés, jazz clubs, and art institutions, such as the magnificent Musée National Eugène Delacroix, are shaded by it, and it’s only a short walk from the old Hôtel d’Alsace, where exiled Oscar Wilde spent his last days in 1900.
The church has endured some hardships in its 15 centuries, including fires and a devastating saltpeter explosion that leveled its Benedictine abbey and cloisters—and the original structure was outright destroyed by the Normans when they ransacked Paris in the year 885. But Pope Alexander III rebuilt Saint-Germain-des-Prés at the top of the 11th century, and that edifice—despite the usual well-intentioned expansions and renovations, as well as a weird stint as a prison during the French Revolution—has stood tall in this neighborhood for 1,000 years. A passel of Frankish royals are entombed here, as is philopospher and mathematician René Descartes, and the church’s stained glass, murals, and stone carvings are some of the most glorious in Europe.

Now, a U.S.-based nonprofit organization called the American Friends for the Preservation of Saint Germain des Prés is working to ensure that this singularly important Parisian church will stand for another thousand years by raising funds for an exhaustive restoration project.
“A small group of interested people formed the American Friends to help save the church,” says board member David Sheppe, a former investment banker. “We recognized early on that the church had a significant impact on Americans who traveled to Paris (including servicemen in World War II), and on world culture more generally, and that this was in danger of being lost if some action was not taken.”
Under the guidance of noted Parisian architect Pierre-Antoine Gatier, the restoration team aims, first and foremost, to clean and revive the religious artwork lining the walls, filling the window arches, and covering the ceilings of the church, brightening colors dimmed by a millennium of candle smoke and the contemplative sighs of the faithful. The work won’t be finished until sometime in 2022.
The French government is offsetting some of the effort’s $5.7 million cost, and the U.S.-based group has aligned with a French counterpart, the Preservation of Saint Germain des Prés Foundation. But the fund-raisers have their work cut out for them: Fully 85 percent of the restoration’s funding will come from private donors. To that end, Sheppe leads the project’s Adopt A Saint Germain Star campaign, through which patrons can hitch their proverbial wagon to one of the 800 or so gold-leaf stars on the ceiling of the church’s Monk’s Choir. A clever interactive map of the ceiling allows donors to pick their star with a minimum donation of $100.
Watch the restoration team’s inspiring video below, and prepare to reach for your wallet.
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